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Tonight (The Tonight Show with Steve Allen)

Late Night

About This Show

from the Museum of Broadcast Communications Encyclopedia of Television

A long-running late night program, the Tonight Show was the first, and for decades the most-watched, network talk program on television. Since 1954 NBC has aired a number of versions of the show which has, as of the mid-1990s, seen four principle hosts and one consistent format except for a brief diversion in its early days. What started out as a music, comedy and talk program first hosted by Steve Allen became, for a time, a magazine-type program, broadcasting news and entertainment segments from various correspondents located in different cities nationally. That short-lived format, however, lacked the appeal of a comedy-interview show revolving around one dynamic host.

Allen also continued something else he had begun on The Tonight Show, on The Steve Allen Show, discovering new talent. Andy Williams, Eydie Gorme and Steve Lawrence got their starts on The Tonight Show. And on the new show, Allen's man in the street interview segments launched the careers of comedians Bill Dana, Pat Harrington, Louis Nye, Tom Poston and Don Knotts. Dana played the timid Hispanic Jose' Jiminez, and Harrington the suave Italian golfer Guido Panzino.

From mid-1957 until the present, Jack Paar, Johnny Carson and Jay Leno have all three followed Allen's lead and hosted a show of celebrity interviews, humor and music, each host leading his show with signature style. Late night talk in the first three decades of television was dominated by the Tonight Show, and for the majority of that time by Johnny Carson. However, during the 1980s and early 1990s the late-night landscape began to change as more talk shows took to the air. Change was accelerated by the appeal of David Letterman and a combination of other factors, including inexpensive production, audience interest in celebrity and entertainment gossip, and an overall increased reliance on the talk show as forum for information and debate about the important as well as unimportant issues of the day. The late-night talk genre expanded as network competitors and comrades sought the kind of success that was originally the province of the Tonight Show.

Each of the Tonight Show principal hosts brought his own unique talent and title to the program. All of the shows featured an opening monologue, a sidekick or co-host, in-house musicians and cadre of guest hosts. Steve Allen's Tonight! featured his musical talents and penchant for unique comedy. He was well known for performing his own musical numbers on the piano and for humorous antics such as on-the-street improvisations and bantering with the audience, both of which were forerunners to the kinds of comedy stunts that became a staple much later on Late Night with David Letterman, also on NBC. In 1957 Allen left Tonight! to concentrate on another variety show he hosted on Sunday evenings. Allen's version of the show was immediately followed by the unsuccessful magazine format, Tonight: America After Dark, which lasted only a few weeks. That show was led by Jack Lescoulie, but he was never the central figure Allen had been. Essentially, Lescoulie introduced the segments and correspondents around the nation.

THE TONIGHT SHOW
September 1954-January 1957

HOST
Steve Allen
Ernie Kovacs (1956-1957)

REGULAR PERFORMERS

Gene Rayburn
Steve Lawrence
Eydie Gorme
Pat Marshall (1954-1955)
Pat Kirby (1955-1957)
Hy Averback (1955)
Skitch Henderson and His Orchestra
Peter Handley (1956-1957)
Maureen Arthur (1956-1957)
Bill Wendell (1956-1957)
Barbara Loden (1956-1957)
LeRoy Holmes and Orchestra (1956-1957)

People Who Talked About This Show

  • Andy Williams
  • Bill Dana
  • Don Knotts
  • Jonathan Winters
  • Michael Dann
  • Milton Delugg
  • Phyllis Diller
  • Skitch Henderson
  • Steve Allen
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  • Highlights

Highlights

  • Steve Allen on the title change from "The Steve Allen Show" to "Tonight", on NBC (01m 35s)Steve Allen on the title change from "The Steve Allen Show" to "Tonight", on NBC (01m 35s)
  • Bill Dana on becoming the head writer on <i>The Steve Allen Show</i> in 1956; does a sample from a routine he wrote for Don Adams to perform on that show, which got him discovered by Steve and hired as a writerBill Dana on becoming the head writer on The Steve Allen Show in 1956; does a sample from a routine he wrote for Don Adams to perform on that show, which got him discovered by Steve and hired as a writer
  • Don Knotts on his regular appearances on <i>The Steve Allen Show</i> and the famed "Man on the Street" recurring sketch that he did with Allen, Louis Nye, and Tom Poston (02m 52s)Don Knotts on his regular appearances on The Steve Allen Show and the famed "Man on the Street" recurring sketch that he did with Allen, Louis Nye, and Tom Poston (02m 52s)
  • Steve Allen on the crew of his <i>Tonight </i> Show (09m 29s)Steve Allen on the crew of his Tonight Show (09m 29s)

People Talking About This Show

  • Steve Allen
    • Steve Allen on the title change from "The Steve Allen Show" to "Tonight", on NBC (01m 35s)
    • Steve Allen on the crew of his Tonight Show (09m 29s)
  • Bill Dana
    • Bill Dana on becoming the head writer on The Steve Allen Show in 1956; does a sample from a routine he wrote for Don Adams to perform on that show, which got him discovered by Steve and hired as a writer
    • Bill Dana on his role on the Tonight Show with Steve Allen; other writers on the show
    • Bill Dana on writing the memorable sketches "The Nutley-Hinkley-Butley-Winkley Report" and "The Question Man" with Don Hinkley and Leonard Stern
    • Bill Dana on the genesis of the "Man on the Street" segments on The Steve Allen Show; working with Don Knotts, Tom Poston, Louis Nye on those sketches
    • Bill Dana on the "letters to the editor" sketches on The Steve Allen Show
  • Michael Dann
    • Michael Dann on Pat Weaver and the creation of Today, The Home Show, and The Tonight Show
      (03m 17s)
  • Milton Delugg
    • Milton Delugg on the genesis of The Tonight Showwith host Steve Allen; on getting called to be the conductor on the Tonight Show starring Johnny Carson. (02m 41s)
  • Phyllis Diller
    • Phyllis Diller on Steve Allen
      (01m 05s)
  • Skitch Henderson
    • Skitch Henderson on the genesis of the Tonight show (18m 17s)
    • Skitch Henderson on the Tonight show (12m 34s)
  • Don Knotts
    • Don Knotts on his "nervous man" act that he performed on The Garry Moore Show and Tonight (with Steve Allen) (02m 53s)
  • Andy Williams
    • Andy Williams on his first TV appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show and as a singer on Tonight (02m 31s)
  • Jonathan Winters
    • Jonathan Winters on working with Steve Allen on The Tonight Show with Steve Allen and his team; Louis Nye, Tom Poston, Pat Harrington (04m 53s)
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From the Collection

  • Broadway Open House

    BROADWAY OPEN HOUSE (1950-51). The "granddaddy" of NBC late night.  Click here for recollections of this pioneering show.

  • NBC Opera Theatre-- Tonight Show Connection— FTC

    NBC TELEVISION OPERA THEATRE (1951-52).  In between Broadway Open House and Steve Allen's Tonight, NBC occasionally filled its late night time slot with productions of its "Opera Theatre," that during this period included "RSVP" (airdate: 11/1/51), "Pique Dame" (airdate: 1/3/52), and "The Barber of Seville" (airdate: 3/6/52).  This series would move to weekend afternoons in October 1952.

  • Tonight! America After Dark FTC

    TONIGHT! AMERICA AFTER DARK (January- July 1957).  In between the Steve Allen and Jack Paar versions of the Tonight Show came this news/interview-type show.  Watch Archive interviewees discuss this short-lived late night show.

  • The Tonight Show aka The Jack Paar Show FTC

    THE JACK PAAR SHOW aka THE TONIGHT SHOW (1957-62).  Watch interviewes including announcer Hugh Downs talk about Jack Paar's version of the late-night classic.

  • Tonight Show (1962 interim) FTC

    THE TONIGHT SHOW (1962). Not to be confused with either the Jack Paar or Johnny Carson versions, this was the interim version helmed by several guest hosts before Johnny Carson arrived (waiting out his contract with ABC). Watch Archive interviewees discuss this post-Paar/pre-Carson interim show.

  • Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson FTC

    THE TONIGHT SHOW STARRING JOHNNY CARSON (1962-92).  Watch Archive interviewees including regulars Ed McMahon, Skitch Henderson, and Milton Delugg discuss this seminal entry in late-night programming.

  • Tonight Show Starring Jay Leno

    THE TONIGHT SHOW STARRING JAY LENO.  Watch Archive interviewees discuss this contemporary version of the classic late-night franchise.

  • Tonight Show Starring Conan O'Brien FTC

    THE TONIGHT SHOW STARRING CONAN O'BRIEN.  Archive interviewees to discuss this short-lived version of the late-night franchise, upcoming...

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